Tag Archive for 'copywriting'

Meltdown!

My computer went into meltdown this week — soooo frustrating!

It locked up and has been totally unusable for several hours at least five times in the last seven days, putting everything behind. We finally discovered a virus – urgh! – and most things are back to normal now.  Unfortunately I’m having issues uploading to my websites, so that’s still an issue.

As a result of all this, the newsletter is waaaaaaaaaaaaay overdue.  Hopefully subscribers won’t be too upset, especially since it’s been totally out of my hands.

(I had a copywriting job come in two days ago, and I’ve had to delay that as well.  Luckily it’s a repeat client and he knows this is not the norm.)

Look out for the newsletter hopefully in a couple of days.

 

Cheryl

p.s.  My Twitter followers exceed 200 now. All hands-free!

 

 

This made me wonder…

I’ve been an active member on the Warrior Forum for a while now, and getting some pretty good information there. (*Warrior Forum is a place for internet marketers to discuss issues, brainstorm, and swap ideas.)

There are many writers there who are charging $3 – $10 for 450 word articles, some are even charging that for 1,000 word articles.

In my usual predictable way, I found myself trying to convince them to charge reasonable rates for their services.  One reason for this is the fact it impacts all writers all around the world.

Anyway, I’ve had someone get quite upset about the posts quoting my current rates.  He finds $50 for a 300 word article (or $75 for 450 words) to be ‘quite disgusting and over the top’.  Personally, I take offense at the other end of the scale, where writers are charging such a pittance for their hard earned skills.

I don’t understand why anyone would charge such low rates.  If you are doing this, please don’t.  Yes, I know, we’ve been down this path before.

I’m pretty much repeating what I wrote on the Warrior Forum:  I am working 1-2 days a week on my copywriting business, and sometimes only for  a few hours a week.  I am earning several hundred dollars for those few hours.  I’m happy, and can’t understand why others are upset and offended by what I’m doing.

The bottom line is, my clients are paying these rates and are happy with my work.  I wrote a sales page for one client just two weeks ago.  He’s now asked me to write another sales page for him.  If he wasn’t happy, he wouldn’t do that.                                            

In the scheme of things my rates aren’t high.  I am now charging $350 for a sales page.  I was charging $280 but was told my rates were much lower than the rates everyone else was charging. So I put them up.  I’m still getting the work.

Yesterday I had three emails asking me to do copywriting of one sort or another.  One has already come to fruition.  We’ll see what happens with the others.

The bottom line is I’m happy to get as little as an additional $200 per week from my copywriting. (More is good, but I can live that that amount too.)  With everything I do, I don’t want to do this full-time. I love writing non-fiction books.  I love writing articles, and I love teaching writers how to earn decent income from their writing.

These are all things that make me who I am.  I don’t feel the need to justify any of that to anyone. Why are people upset that I command – and get – the rates that I feel comfortable with, and the rates I feel my work (and results) deserve?

Clients would not come back to me time after time if they weren’t happy with my writing.

It made me stop and think that perhaps my rates were too high.  But only for a heart-beat. I’ve worked long and hard to get where I am today. My writing has improved tremendously over the years, and I’ve studied and practiced to get to this point.

What I realised after pondering this for several hours was that these other writers were feeling threatened.  Some of them have told me they’ve learned to write faster so they can earn more money.

OMG! Are they serious?  I’m generally a slow writer, but I can churn this stuff out fairly quickly.  $75 for a 450 word article equates to about 35 minutes of work – a little longer if I have to research the subject.

Sales pages take around 2 hours; often less.

I only take on work I can complete within a decent time frame, and will never take on something I have no wish to do. 

Yes, I’m lucky – I have other income streams.  And this is exactly why I try to impress on all writers the need for more than one income stream.  If you only have one stream of income (i.e. copywriting) and it suddenly disappears, then you have nothing.

Til next time (and the next rant <g>),

 

Cheryl

 

                                                                                                                           

Copywriting – my thoughts

If you’ve been a subscriber to my newsletter for any length of time, you’ll know I’ve been ‘dabbling’ in copywriting over the past year or so.

I’ve been marketing my butt off, and was on the verge of giving it all away because I felt like I was constantly marketing my services for little return.

Don’t get me wrong, the jobs I was doing were each worth doing, (up to $1,000 each job) but I certainly didn’t have a constant flow of work.

If you haven’t done so already, read my editorial for the last issue where I talk indepth about writing keyword articles.

The update on that job is the client asked for some changes.  They took me all of one minute maximum!

Last week I had a ‘networking’ workshop to attend, where I picked up a few potential new clients.  The next day I had a meeting with another potential client, (another client recommended me to him) and walked away with several hundred dollars worth of copywriting work, and the promise of more in the future.

This week I’ve worked my butt off producing the work that was requested.

In the midst of all that, I have had the keyword article client ask for more work to be done, plus another potential client – from a few weeks back – come back to me with a request for an article.

The end result is the last two are now booked in for next week.  There’s no way I can get their work done this week, partly because of the current project, and partly because my writing group is having a retreat this weekend.  I’m presenting two separate ‘workshops’ so I also have to prepare the information for those.

Naturally, I want to do justice to the project I’m working on, and I’m not prepared to jeopardise that by taking on too much work. Nor do I want to put myself under pressure.

It’s a really nice feeling to be able to tell a client (or two) you can’t fit them in until next week!

 

Cheryl